Burton Mail

Paramedic Pat recalls the toughest day of her 40-year EMAS career

KULDIP ALSO LOOKS BACK ON STARTING AT SERVICE BACK IN 1981

- By HELEN KREFT helen.kreft@reachplc.com @helen_kreft

PAT Withers was just eight years into her role at East Midlands Ambulance Service when she attended one of the most challengin­g incidents of her career.

On January 8, 1989 British Midland Flight 92, a Boeing 737-400, crashed onto the motorway embankment between the M1 motorway and A453 road near Kegworth, Leicesters­hire, while attempting to make an emergency landing at East Midlands Airport.

A total of 47 people were killed, leaving 79 surviving passengers and crew.

Pat, who is now a clinical operations manager with the service, said: “We would usually get a message come through on the radio to say that a plane was coming into some difficulty on the way to the airport and so we were mobilised to the runway of the airport on standby just in case.

“This time the message we received said that a plane was down across the motorway.

“Arriving on the scene of the plane crash and seeing the sight in front of us, nothing can ever prepare you for that.

“That incident affected me for a long time, which is why I am now trained to offer Peer 2 Peer assistance to my colleagues as one of our many support networks we have in place at East Midlands Ambulance Service.

“The ambulance service has come a long way since the Kegworth Air Disaster in recognisin­g that these incidents can have a lasting impact on the frontline colleagues who attend and therefore may need vital support.”

Pat, 64, was speaking while celebratin­g her milestone 40th year with the ambulance service alongside Kuldip Bhamrah, 67, an ambulance technician. They both joined what was then known as Leicesters­hire Ambulance Service in May 1981 as a member of the non-emergency patient transport service.

A year later Kuldip successful­ly trained and qualified as a technician and has responded to thousands of 999 calls ever since. This is a route of progressio­n still available to staff at EMAS today.

Pat started around the same time as Kuldip in April 1981 and remembers first seeing him as they were both waiting for their job interviews.

Pat said: “I started my career doing part-time hours taking patients with mental health issues to and from their hospital appointmen­ts.

“This would only take up three hours of my time a day. After six months of doing this, I was encouraged to apply for a full-time position as my colleagues believed I had the right skills to do the job.

“The fact that I received this feedback from men in a very male-dominated

profession in the early 1980s was very validating.”

Kuldip, the first Sikh ambulancem­an in the East Midlands, was a recipient of the Queen’s Ambulance Medal, given to him by Prince Charles.

One of his many career highlights included being invited along to the iconic Abbey Road Studios in London, recording the Beatles classic With a Little Help From My Friends to celebrate the NHS’S 70th birthday in 2018.

Prior to a career of responding to patients in an emergency, Kuldip was in two bands – KS Bamrah & Party, and Awaaz Group – which released several EPS and albums throughout the 70s and 80s.

Kuldip said: “I have always known that I wanted to be able to help other people in their time of need and at the time I used music to be able to do just that.”

For Pat, after being encouraged by her colleagues to join the ambulance service full-time, she was put through her paces at training school in order to become more hands-on in the treatment of her patients.

Pat said: “The training was a real eye-opener for me as I soon realised that my role involved more than just picking people up from a place and dropping them off at the nearest hospital.

“I’ve always been a firm believer that if you’re interested in something

then you’re willing to learn and that’s what I did.”

After qualifying from her course, Pat was able to administer certain medication­s and first aid to patients, especially children, that she would have been unable to before.

She added: “I thought I was the bee’s knees because I could perform a blood pressure check and bandage a patient when it was required.”

The past 14 months have been tough for Kuldip, Pat and many of their colleagues as the Covid-19 pandemic has been the toughest time for the NHS in its 73-year history.

Unfortunat­ely, in November last year, Kuldip caught Covid-19.

He could not return to duties until March 2021 as he developed long Covid with symptoms including fatigue, shortness of breath and heart palpitatio­ns.

He said: “For the first time in my nearly 40-year career, I was the one who needed an ambulance as I was so short of breath and had a sky-high temperatur­e.

“I honestly thought in that moment that I was not going to make it and that I would die.”

However, Kuldip has no plans to retire in the near future.

He added: “I’m not ready to close the door on such an amazing chapter of my life and I will only retire when my body starts to tell me that the time is right.

“My wife has always been, and continues to be, wholeheart­edly supportive of what it is I do.

“I have had my Covid vaccine which makes me feel more protected and I feel looked after by EMAS who have continuall­y supplied me and my colleagues with the levels of PPE we need to stay safe.”

Reflecting on her time at EMAS, Pat said: “40 years down the line, I still don’t know everything, but I am still just as passionate about providing quality patient care and have built up a good rapport with so many of my colleagues throughout the decades.”

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 ??  ?? East Midlands Ambulance Service workers Pat Withers and Kuldip Bhamrah today, and when they started in 1981
East Midlands Ambulance Service workers Pat Withers and Kuldip Bhamrah today, and when they started in 1981
 ??  ?? The Kegworth air disaster of January 8, 1989
The Kegworth air disaster of January 8, 1989

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